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Reinventing the Role of Medical Affairs

Reinventing the Role of Medical Affairs

A strategic overhaul of medical affairs can help pharma companies win in an era of Big Data medicine.

By Loic Plantevin, Christoph Schlegel and Maria Gordian

March 15, 2017

min read

Brief

Reinventing the Role of Medical Affairs

The most competitive pharma companies in the coming decade will be masters of data and digital technologies. They will generate and analyze vast volumes of real-world data and excel at communicating scientific evidence. Above all, they will help physicians navigate in a far more complex healthcare universe.

That profound shift is already under way. Pharma companies are developing data and scientific insights. But information channels are changing, and many companies have difficulty communicating science effectively with the growing array of stakeholders that influence purchasing decisions. That shortfall is one reason many new drug launches underperform: 50% of all launches now fail to meet company expectations, Bain research shows.

Leading companies are upgrading medical affairs to overcome that deficit. Equipped with deep product knowledge and disease understanding, medical affairs teams can become a strategic ace in an era of Big Data. They are well positioned to generate and present high-quality scientific knowledge to the market and educate stakeholders about next-generation products.

Loïc Plantevin, a partner with Bain's Healthcare practice, describes how medical affairs can become a strategic ace by presenting high-quality data to the people who influence purchasing decisions.

As the demand for real-world evidence grows, those two roles will become increasingly critical to pharma companies’ performance. Physicians already are reducing their reliance on sales representatives and turning to more scientific sources of information, Bain research shows (see Figure 1). That shift is even more pronounced among younger physicians. In parallel, the total number of sales representatives has fallen. In North America, pharma salesforce levels have dropped by about 7% between 2005 and 2011 and have leveled off since then. In Europe, they have fallen by 10% between 2006 and 2010.

An experienced medical affairs team can link scientific and clinical results to patient outcomes, adding value at every stage of a drug’s development. When discussing a potential new compound with physicians, payers and opinion leaders, for example, medical affairs teams gather vital feedback on its market potential and patient needs at the earliest stages of the drug development process. The insights they glean over time can improve return on investment and create a strong competitive advantage by helping companies design more effective clinical programs and launches.

Transforming medical affairs to medical value

Why have so few pharma companies started down this path? Most remain focused on products instead of outcomes, and they regard medical affairs staff as technical product advisers. That traditional approach could become a handicap as rivals retrain medical affairs teams to develop scientific evidence and demonstrate to physicians, payers, patient groups and key opinion leaders how new products improve patient outcomes.

The winners in an era of Big Data will transform medical affairs teams into medical value teams with three strategic roles: communicating scientific evidence, providing market-based strategic input to drug development and portfolio management, and overseeing the effort to produce Big Data and real-world evidence.

Engaging stakeholders and communicating science

Bain research shows that 88% of US physicians and 83% of EU physicians consider real-world evidence a top criterion in prescribing drugs (see Figure 2). But sorting through the vast increase in evidence has become an overwhelming task—physicians, payers and healthcare providers are struggling with data overload. At the same time, diagnostic tools are becoming more sophisticated and drugs increasingly complex (see Figure 3). Those developments have increased the need for more transparent data on drug performance.

Leading companies have understood that medical value teams can step into the breach and help physicians, payers, providers and key opinion leaders make sense of a deluge of data and identify the best use for new products. That approach creates a virtuous circle for pharma companies.

As medical value teams build long-term relationships with a variety of stakeholders, they benefit from continual market feedback and a better, more nuanced understanding of the market and patient needs. At the same time, increased engagement with stakeholders helps pharma companies focus on outcomes.

When a new entrant launched a product challenging a big specialty pharma company, the strong relationship and trust the pharma company had built with prescribers over many years allowed it to engage in a frank dialogue with them about the competition. By using scientific data, the pharma company’s medical affairs team was able to cut through the marketing noise and profile its product fairly vs. the new entrant.

Providing market-based strategic input to drug development and portfolio management

By leveraging deep relationships with prescribers and opinion leaders and continually collecting feedback and signals from the market, medical value teams can provide critical input to drug development and life cycle management from early identification of promising compounds through post-launch market strategies.

When leading companies initiate a new drug program, their medical value teams provide market-based input on unmet medical needs and clinical requirements, informing the development strategy and evaluation of the clinical and economic potential of a program. During clinical development, they contribute early stakeholder feedback providing firsthand input on product positioning and the scientific platform.

As companies prepare to launch a new drug, medical value teams develop a strategy for market education. Finally, once it is on the market, they design and implement data generation strategies, integrating classical phase IV studies with real-world evidence and Big Data analytics.

To do all those things effectively, medical value teams need to be an integral part of cross-functional product development and product management teams. By working with all pharma functions along the value chain, they help to increase a company’s understanding of unmet medical needs, attractiveness of treatment pathways, value of clinical trial protocol options, speed of regulatory approvals and launch success rates.

Developing Big Data and real-world evidence

A third important role for medical value teams is creating scientific evidence to support drug development, including real-world evidence, in-house data and scientific analysis. A medical value team can help companies cope not only with the sharp increase in demand for independent data but also the steady rise in drug protocols and guidelines and greater transparency requirements. Leading companies deploy medical value teams to integrate new types of evidence and steer collaborations with data providers and big analytics companies.

Digital technologies in particular offer pharma companies innovative new ways to engage with customers and collect real-world data at lower cost. GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) partnered with Apple in June 2016, using Apple’s ResearchKit app framework to monitor patient progress in a large rheumatoid arthritis trial. GSK’s goal is to gather data for three months on the condition and symptoms of 300 people with rheumatoid arthritis as well as insights on how it might build the iPhone-based ResearchKit app into future clinical trials. The ResearchKit app gathers data on joint pain and fatigue using a mix of surveys and sensor-enabled tests. That reduces costs and travel for patients, simplifies data gathering and increases patient engagement. The app is an early milestone in the medical data revolution, but it underscores the capabilities that medical value teams will need in the future.

Shire is also leveraging digital medicine and data to improve patient outcomes. Its myPKFiT software uses data analytics to reduce the number of blood samples needed in calculating prophylactic medication dosages for hemophilia patients. The software uses existing clinical data to predict patients’ pharmacokinetics (PK) curve based on 2 blood samples instead of 11. A personalized approach based on PK enables more precise dosing, fewer side effects and better patient engagement.

Biotech companies such as Celgene have led the way by infusing science and medical knowledge in their go-to-market models and creating a pivotal role for medical value teams. By performing multiple trials and giving physicians early access to drugs still under development, biotech companies spread knowledge about new compounds while gaining valuable expert input.

Pharma companies can build on that experience by developing scientific evidence and reaching out to the entire spectrum of stakeholders to demonstrate the value of new compounds. That, in turn, will help shift their focus from products to outcomes.

Monday morning 8:00 AM agenda

Medical affairs departments designed for the 20th century will be eclipsed by the coming era of Big Data medicine. Leadership teams eager to rethink the role of medical affairs can begin by adding the following key questions to their next strategy meeting agenda:

Does medical affairs have a clear engagement strategy for each important stakeholder group, and are we continually monitoring and improving them?

Are we leveraging the full potential of our medical affairs team across all stages of drug development and life cycle management?

Do we have Big Data and real-world evidence strategies for our key products, and are they fully integrated with the overall brand strategy?

Does our medical affairs team have the right capabilities for a new era of Big Data medicine? If not, do we have a plan to develop them?

As digital technologies transform drug development and marketing, companies that reinvent medical affairs can build competitive advantage in a rapidly changing pharma landscape.

Loic Plantevin is a partner with Bain & Company in the Paris office. Christoph Schlegel is a Bain partner in the Frankfurt office. Maria Gordian is a partner in Bain’s New York office.